* PERVERT, BUTCHIE, LESBIAN EMPLOYEE WHO NEEDS TO BE FIRED :
TSA Complaint from Amelia Gora, a Royal person and to be listed on the Genocide Activities Ongoing File since 1998
Important mainly because you often read messages with this label.
Click to teach Gmail this conversation is not important.
Greetings,
I, Amelia Gora, am lodging an official complaint about the TSA from the Kona Airport to Honolulu.
My flight was HA 297 Z
I went through two (2) screenings and was still bodily searched by a lesbian white woman who also made me walk barefooted across a dirty, broken glass sidewalk to pass through the second body scan.
She still searched me, feeling me all over including my back, sides, and crotch.
The search was uncalled for.
I want to put this on record, and that butchie, lesbian person needs to be searched using the same methods that she has put me through within the publics view.
Please add that TSA on the Genocide Activist list because she ran me through two (2) body scans within two (2) minutes of each other.
The TSA search from Honolulu to Kona wasn't nearly as bad as the TSA butchie, lesbian, hate filled eyes person, and ran me through the body scan once (1x).
I had a temporary State Identification and submitted an old ID, active bus pass, active debit card and still the multiple two (2) body scans by the TSA on the way back home.
I suggest that a complete body scan of two (2) body scans be given to the TSA, and a thorough body search on her total body be made by a male be done on her.
Everyone should know how offensive it is for a TSA butchie, lesbian, with hate in her eyes grope, grab, prod, and actively help herself to my private parts.... either have the same done to her or fire her upon receipt of this complaint.
I also request that the offender, the TSA person, be reprimanded, and this complaint be entered onto her personnel record, and any future complaints from others be cause for removal from any public job affecting innocents and be logged as an offense against a Royal person who is not subject to the laws in our Hawaiian Kingdom nation, and document the TSA butchie, lesbian, with hate, documented as a genocide activist for aggressively and wrongfully handling a Royal person a Kamehameha descendant/ heir in our Hawaiian Islands.
May she experience the same and more in her own personal searches by others who have intense hate for persons like herself.
Uncomfortable about where she put her hands on my personal, private parts - in the crotch areas.
Expecting this complaint to also be filed in her personnel file.
The double body scan which emanated loads of xrays through two (2) scans with two (2) minutes was not normal. How's about scanning that TSA every time she gets a person to scan double and do it to her each time she scans innocents such as I?
Sincerely,
Amelia Gora, a Royal person, one of Kamehameha's descendants/heirs
Reference:
Are TSA agents getting ruder? TSA complaints are on the rise.
TSA agents are getting ruder, and it’s time to do something about it. So say an increasing number of air travelers with TSA complaints, citing their own experiences of being harassed and harangued by the screeners who are supposed to be helping them.
Gayle Sommers, a retired social worker from University Place, Wash., recalls the welcome she and her fellow passengers received when transferring from an international flight from Paris in Chicago.Laura Hinson encountered one such agent at the United Airlines terminal in Los Angeles recently. She watched the government employee brusquely order a passenger to unpack his bag, with “anger and contempt” coming from across the counter, remembers Hinson, an investor relations officer who lives in Carmel Valley, Calif. Passengers should be screened thoroughly, of course. But shouldn’t they also be treated respectfully and compassionately? So how do you make these airport workers more accommodating, or at the very least stop barking orders at the passengers patiently standing in a long line? A TSA spokesman says agents are trained in “general” etiquette, including subjects such as effective communication, common courtesies, and appropriate language use. The agency also has a customer service branch responsible for tracking the TSA complaints and working with appropriate TSA personnel to resolve grievances. Yet complaints are on the rise. For the first three-quarters of the fiscal year, it recorded 6,700 grievances, an 8 percent increase in TSA complaints from the same period a year before. That’s a complaint rate of 12.27 per million passengers. Frequent Business Traveler magazine polls readers about their TSA experiences and, in one 2015 survey, 87 percent of air travelers gave the TSA a “fair or poor” rating. The TSA isn’t a happy place to work, either. A 2016 survey found the agency ranked 303rd out of 305 federal agencies, a 5.2 percent drop from the previous year. Only the Office of Intelligence and Analysis and the U.S. Secret Service scored lower. If you fly, you probably don’t just know someone who has been browbeaten by an agent — you have a few TSA complaints stories of your own to share. Karin Kemp, a retired graphic designer from Charlotte, remembers the time an agent opened her wallet and rifled through the money. “Don’t ask me why she was doing that; it was never explained to me.” “A TSA staffer literally bellowed in English for people to line up,” she says. The screening area was confusing and chaotic as it filled with incoming passengers. The agent became even louder and more rude as the weary travelers piled in. “The first exposure French tourists were getting to the U.S. was this guy,” she laments. I have a few experiences of my own, too. I’ve been barked at (“You’re in the wrong line!”), ordered around like a recruit in boot camp (“Take out your laptop! Take off your shoes!”) and shamed (“Did you forget to take this out of your bag, sir?”). How can they make “sir” sound like an insult? The answer to the problem is simple: Better etiquette training for TSA employees. Also, why not reward the agents for being nice to the passengers they’re supposed to serve? The agency may even consider incorporating the word “service” into its mission, because it is providing a necessary security service. But then, maybe we could stand to take a lesson or two ourselves. “I wonder if the rude agent is a reflection of an even ruder traveler,” muses David Kazarian, a pharmacist from Tampa. I wonder, too. How to handle a rude agent • Report the agent to a supervisor. Ask for a Supervisory Transportation Security Officer (STSO) immediately. That’s what Shirley Kroot does when she meets an unpleasant agent. “I have encountered my share of rude TSA agents, especially in Chicago,” says Kroot, a retired real estate appraiser from Huntley, Ill. “After I get through security, I report them to their supervisor.” • Complain in writing. You can send an email directly to the TSA. You’ll want to select the category “Professionalism/Customer Service” when you do. Make sure you note other details, such as the name of the agent and the time and the terminal where the screening took place. • Contact your elected representative. Congress keeps a careful watch on the TSA and its activities. You can contact your representative online here. Congress has tried to hold the agency accountable for its actions in the past, and its vigilance is bipartisan. |
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